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Money lessons from classic movies

Posted Sep 29 2009, 08:48 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Jim Wang at partner blog Bargaineering.

Movies today can rely on special effects, monster marketing efforts, and a few pretty faces (*cough* "Transformers 2" *cough*). In the 1980s and early '90s, movies had to rely on the story and the acting to achieve success.

Out of that era, which coincided with my childhood, came a lot of classic movies that teach powerful lessons about how to deal with your money, how to approach your career, and how to find success in both.

I thought it would be fun to pick out five lessons from just five movies from that era (one of them is from 2000, but no fancy special effects there).

Be careful whom you trust. Rocky is one of the iconic film franchises of my generation and there is a powerful financial lesson to be learned in the fifth film. If you remember, it's in "Rocky V" that you learn of the health effects of fighting the Russian machine, Ivan Drago. You also learn of Rocky's financial woes when he discovers that Paulie, his wife Adrian's brother, signed over power of attorney to Rocky's accountant. The accountant then proceeds to lose all of Rocky's money flipping real estate.

The lesson here is that you have to be extremely careful whom you trust, especially when it comes to your money. As you acquire more money, you put it into the hands of mutual fund managers, financial advisers and other "experts." You have to carefully vet them and I believe you should never sign over power of attorney.

Fake it until you make it. In "The Secret of My Success," Michael J. Fox plays Brantley Foster, a laid-off financial analyst who sneaks into a new job as a mailroom clerk at his uncle's company. From there, he finds out that most of the executives are making terrible decisions and starts to fake being an executive. The movie is a classic and the iconic scenes include Fox changing from the casual wear of the clerk to the suit of the executive while in an elevator.

The lesson here is that sometimes you need to fake it until you make it. Some use the adage "Dress for the job you want, not the job you have." In the end, the message is the same: If you behave as if you belong somewhere, then you do. In the end, what's the difference between pretending and being? Nothing, really. (I don't advocate deception or lying though. I believe that crosses the line.)

All we need is the right opportunity. "Trading Places" is an awesome movie and one of my favorites. In "Trading Places," two commodity traders, Mortimer and Randolph Duke, decide to conduct a little social experiment. They want to know if the rich and successful are that way because they started rich and whether a common street criminal could achieve the same given the same starting point. So they take Eddie Murphy's character, street hustler Billy Ray Valentine, and have him swap places with Dan Aykroyd's character, a successful broker.

Life isn't fair, but sometimes two rich guys decide to make a bet and give you the keys to the kingdom to see what you'll do with them. The lesson here is that you should always be working hard, whether it's trading orange futures or street hustling, so that you can take advantage when an opportunity presents itself.

Keep emotions in check. "Bull Durham" is one of the most well-known baseball movies in history. It involves veteran catcher Crash Davis, played by Kevin Costner, and a powerful rookie pitcher named Nuke LaLoosh, played by Tim Robbins. Crash is brought to the minor league team to try to mold and shape the promising Nuke. In their first meeting, which is in a bar, they almost come to blows as Crash taunts the hot-tempered Nuke.

The lesson here is that you need to keep your emotions in check. Had Nuke struck Crash, he could've broken his hand, ended his minor league career, and never achieved the success he would get to enjoy later. With finances and your career, you need to keep a level head. When making stock investments, don't let your emotions make decisions for you.

Don't do anything illegal. "Boiler Room" isn't quite a classic movie but it does have a powerful lesson to tell. It follows the story of Seth Davis, a college dropout who is running an underground casino in his house. He eventually gets a job at a brokerage, where he's paid to get rich investors to buy into penny stocks his firm is pumping and dumping.

At first he doesn't realize how the scheme works and that what he's doing is illegal. He sees only the lavish lifestyles the more senior brokers are living. Eventually he realizes he's just scamming people of their hard-earned savings.

There are two lessons in this movie. The first is that you shouldn't let greed overcome your decision-making process. The allure of a hot penny stock is like the siren song of Peisinoe, Aglaope and Thelxiepeia; it can make you do some crazy things.

The second lesson is that you shouldn't ever do anything illegal. 

Related reading at Bargaineering:

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FHA mortgage loan requirements

2010 federal tax brackets

Comments

 

Run While You Can: My Favorite One Would Be "Run, Forrest, Run" From "Forrest

Gump". The lesson here for the Main Street is you have to run away as fast as you could from those high interest credit card. The lesson here for the Wall Steet is, well,

you know what I mean.

Farenheit 911 has to be my favorite movie and I think the lesson there is that you better watch who you put in office, dumbos need not apply.

You mean like Obama, Davey?

Pity you can't spell the name of your "favorite" movie, troll.

I take my money lessons from "Scarface" . To quote Tony Montana, "In this country, you gotta make the money first. Then when you get the money, you get the power. Then when you get the power, then you get the women." Yeah baby, money, respect, power and women - The American dream!

Cocktails and Risky business with Tom cruise are two of my favorite money making or following your dreams to success classics.

Quest for Fire.   I think this movie provides a wonderful lesson about money, basically that money is not needed for survival, rather instincts, the will to live, and fire are the basics of life.

My favorite movie about budgeting has to "Half Baked"  The scene where Thurgood has to take his woman on a date and he only has a couple of bucks is classic. Talk about creative budgeting and using all resources at hand. I totally live my life like that.

While a book first, my main money lesson is from A Christmas Carol.  Specifcally that money in itself is not a goal, and it's rather pathetic to work all your life to be rich only to die never spending it.  Understand what you want and why you want it, then work towrds that goal.

I've also heard that The Money Pit isn't a comedy but a documentary.  Lesson leard: don't beleive all the hype about how "easy" it can be to make a buck doing anything.  Things go wrong.

I'd rather give lessons from the first Rocky myself.  Hollywood loves the story about how hard work leads the underdog to win, but it's nice to have a movie or two out there that say that sometimes you can work hard and still lose.  I'm of the theory that people are financially unprepared because they're too busy waiting for the "hollywood miracle".

Or if you can tollerate the depressing nature of it, the japanese animated classic Grave of the fireflies it the antithesis of that "hard work pays off" attitude.  It follows two orphen siblings in the last days of WWII Japan.  Fleeing their aunt's due to their relationship becoming ever more abusive, they try to make it on their own, only both starve to death by the end of the movie.  The lessons: sometimes hard work and optimism don't pay off, and sometimes you have to swallow your pride and accept a bad situation in order to avoid a worse one.  Granted there's a lot more to take away from that film, but those are the lessons that can apply to one's finances.

Never, ever buy a car with your emotions.

Secret of My Success? Trading Places? These are supposed to be classic movies? Please! Those are commercial entertainment pieces. I thought I was going to see an article about real classics, such as Citizen Kane, Casablanca, The Third Man, or Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. I've got news for this author: they actually made movies long before 1980! (And just for the record, I was not born myself yet until long after the classics I named were made. So this isn't just generational grumbling.)

At first, I thought the author must have meant it satirically when he said that in the 80's and 90's movies had to rely on story because they didn't have advancerd special effects is embrarassing. But I guess that really is what he thinks of as the old fashioned days of moviemaking. He should try watching a movie some time that isn't even in color. What a myopic perspective.

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